Jack Shroder was drinking
his morning tea on September 11 when he saw the World Trade Center
in flames. After seeing the second plane crash, he knew it was not
an accident.

He called up to his wife, Susie, who came running down the stairs. A
half-hour later, he turned to his wife and said, “This just changed our
lives big time,” Shroder recalls. “They’re going to find me. This is from
Afghanistan. It’s Osama bin Laden and
Washington is going to remember my expertise.” They did. And Jack Shroder’s
life took a big turn.

Shroder is a geoscientist at the University of Nebraska at Omaha and
an expert on the geology and geography of Afghanistan. Just as he suspected,
the events of September 11 cast him into the media spotlight, as
he became an important information source for the U.S. government. Shroder
remembers how he first became involved in Afghanistan. “It was all sort
of a fluke,” he says.

In the early 1970s, when Shroder was doing geomorphology at the University
of Nebraska, he decided to help a doctoral student named Christian Jung
with grant work in Afghanistan. But, Jung died before completing his work.
Shroder took their joint $8,000 grant and went to Afghanistan to create
an atlas in Jung’s memory. “One thing led to another and some 60
to 80 million dollars later over the last 30 years in grant money from
Washington, we had this huge Afghanistan Studies Center,” he says.

Shroder first visited Afghanistan in 1973. The U.S. Embassy made him
head of the Kabul University Seismic Station. “They didn’t tell me that
they were looking at Soviet and Chinese nuke explosions north of the border.
And I wasn’t sophisticated enough to know,” Shroder says. He would bring
the seismic data back and forth from the University to the embassy. Then
the embassy, with permission from Henry Kissinger, gave Shroder security
clearance to take control of its map collection. “To a geologist/geographer
and a university professor with no restrictions on publication, I was smart
enough to know when I saw things that I shouldn’t have really seen not
to publish any of that. But, they basically let me have a carte blanche
look at Afghanistan and this was all before the Russian invasion and the
Communist time, so everything was open.”

In 1978, the Afghan Communists interned and then deported Shroder. But
his cook was able to bring all the maps Shroder had collected and created
to the embassy on his bicycle. And the maps made it to the United States
in a diplomatic pouch. “That stuff was very important to us back here,”
Shroder says.

Young and “fearless,” Shroder went to Pakistan in 1983 — where he “helped
the U.S. government wage war on the Soviet Union in a funny way, as an
educator.” He taught Afghan refugees and showed them how to dig water wells
away from their latrines. At the same time, he acquired Soviet documents
about Afghanistan’s resources — some from Afghans pirating them out of
their ministries. “It would come to me because I was the only American
who was paying attention to the geology anymore,” Shroder says. “Since
then, I sometimes feel like a spy, but I’m not. Spies don’t publish, and
I do.”

After the Soviets left, Shroder and his colleagues from the Afghanistan
Studies Center told U.S. government officials, “We need to look after Afghanistan.
We’re going to have trouble with this place.” Over a decade later, this
past summer, he expressed similar sentiments to the U.S. State Department
about the need for an American presence in Afghanistan. Jack Shroder wishes
he hadn’t “hit that nail on the head” quite so well. After September
11, local reporters contacted Shroder and others at the Afghanistan Studies
Center. Then, one day, a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle
called and asked him if he knew where Osama bin Laden was in the September
video that aired on CNN. “In an inadvertent moment, I let that San Francisco
Chronicle guy know that I knew where it was and all hell broke loose
after that.” Shroder says he knew the rocks and landforms and could place
them in the western Spinghar (White Mountain) region of Tora Bora and nearby.
“I was smart enough to know that I ought to mislead the media a little
bit before I gave away something that I shouldn’t have.” So, to protect
the sensitivity surrounding bin Laden’s whereabouts, Shroder told the reporter
a location he knew was probably not exactly right. He didn’t want the press
to have that precise information before the U.S. government did.

An hour later, a federal agent called him. Since then, he has advised
the FBI and other top U.S. officials on the geology of the region. Dozens
of media organizations have sought interviews with him. “It’s been a real
interesting adventure for an old college professor.” One of
the biggest challenges through this time, Shroder says, has been balancing
the needs of his country with his role as an academic geologist. “I’m paid
by taxpayers to talk and to explain and educate and give people information.
I am not trained to be in a manhunt and to be secret and keep my mouth
shut, and that’s an odd place.”

Shroder says it is his duty, though, to do the best he can to help the
United States. “And I think that’s true of all geologists,” he says. “It
is up to us, if there are good resources in Afghanistan, which I firmly
believe there are, to help the Afghans develop their country by exploiting
their own resources. And I’m going to help American capitalist companies
help the Afghans. So, the resources come out of the ground and the country
gets rebuilt in a good, American, sort of capitalistic but not exploitatively
capitalistic operation.”

He hopes that more American geoscientists will contribute their skills
to help both the United States and the people living in third-world countries.
“We need lots of new people who are trained and educated and paying attention
to this kind of stuff all over the world and geologists more than anybody
are the kinds of people who do that stuff. So I’m hoping that there is
going to be a whole new generation of patriotic Americans that go over
there and are nice. We need nice Americans who get along with the local
people but present a good face for America and come home with some expertise
that is going to help us out in these difficult times to come.”